diff --git a/count.txt b/count.txt index 9f54fe3..190a180 100644 --- a/count.txt +++ b/count.txt @@ -1 +1 @@ -122 +123 diff --git a/output/2024-10-03/2024-10-03generated_image.jpeg b/output/2024-10-03/2024-10-03generated_image.jpeg new file mode 100644 index 0000000..57182ae Binary files /dev/null and b/output/2024-10-03/2024-10-03generated_image.jpeg differ diff --git a/output/2024-10-03/English_final_podcast.mp3 b/output/2024-10-03/English_final_podcast.mp3 new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f7efb85 Binary files /dev/null and b/output/2024-10-03/English_final_podcast.mp3 differ diff --git a/output/2024-10-03/podcast_data.json b/output/2024-10-03/podcast_data.json new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4c52571 --- /dev/null +++ b/output/2024-10-03/podcast_data.json @@ -0,0 +1,63 @@ +{ + "Titles": [ + "A new Ray-Ban Meta update adds reminders and voice messages", + "The new Ford Expedition adds Android Automotive and half of the Lincoln\u2019s panoramic screen", + "Port workers on the East and Gulf coasts agree to end their strikes", + "Disney Imagineer wants his amazing retractable lightsaber to become a toy", + "Watch what it\u2019s like to handle an overturned truck full of burning batteries", + "Apple releases iOS 18.0.1 with bug fixes for iPhone 16 touchscreen and more", + "Sony\u2019s best ANC headphones and earbuds are getting Google\u2019s Find My Device", + "The big boys want in on crypto, too", + "Anker\u2019s Soundcore Liberty 4 Pro earbuds add a charging case screen", + "Senator Laphonza Butler thinks supporting Big AI or human workers is a \u2018false choice\u2019", + "Now you can use Apple\u2019s Home Key to get into your garage or home office", + "The SEC is appealing a federal court\u2019s ruling on Ripple", + "Samsung is turning your Galaxy phone into a smart door key", + "Your smart fridge can now warn you when you\u2019ve spent too long in the shower", + "Google\u2019s AI search summaries officially have ads", + "YouTube Shorts are getting less short", + "Google Lens now lets you search with video", + "Inside Elon Musk\u2019s AI party at OpenAI\u2019s old headquarters", + "XRP slides 9% after SEC appeals decision in landmark Ripple case", + "Nvidia CEO: Demand for next-generation Blackwell AI chip is 'insane'", + "OpenAI gets $4 billion revolving credit line on top of $6.6 billion in funding", + "Revolut slams Meta over approach to scams, says it should compensate victims", + "Klarna CEO says European tech brain drain is \u2018number one risk\u2019 ahead of IPO", + "Oura announces new smart ring with updated design and new sensors for $349", + "OpenAI closes funding at $157 billion valuation, as Nvidia signs on as investor", + "Facebook owner Meta forms data-sharing pact with UK banks to counter scams", + "Even the \u2018godmother of AI\u2019 has no idea what AGI is", + "Apple plans four new retail stores in India", + "A co-lead on Sora, OpenAI\u2019s video generator, has left for Google", + "Investors are scrambling to get into ElevenLabs, which may soon be valued at $3 billion", + "Announcing the final agenda for the Fintech Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024", + "Announcing the final agenda for the Space Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024", + "ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot", + "Initialized Capital restructures, and lets multiple partners go", + "The 13 biggest take-private PE acquisitions so far this year in tech", + "DOJ sentences pair for Apple repair scheme involving 6,000 knockoff iPhones", + "Even the \u2018godmother of AI\u2019 has no idea what AGI is", + "Apple plans four new retail stores in India", + "A co-lead on Sora, OpenAI\u2019s video generator, has left for Google", + "Investors are scrambling to get into ElevenLabs, which may soon be valued at $3 billion", + "ChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot", + "OpenAI launches new \u2018Canvas\u2019 ChatGPT interface tailored to writing and coding projects", + "DOJ sentences pair for Apple repair scheme involving 6,000 knockoff iPhones", + "OpenAI also secured a massive credit line", + "Tesla\u2019s Cybertruck racks up fifth recall in under a year" + ], + "top_news_prompt": "Suppose you are the chief editor at CNBC-TechCheck-Briefing. You need to select 5 most important news events to put into today's briefing(You might be able to see some hint by how many times a news event is reported, but also consider what your audience of CNBC-TechCheck-Briefing is interested in). Return the title of the event in order of importance for these unqiue events.\n Here are the news of today:\nTechCrunch\nEven the \u2018godmother of AI\u2019 has no idea what AGI is\nApple plans four new retail stores in India\nA co-lead on Sora, OpenAI\u2019s video generator, has left for Google\nInvestors are scrambling to get into ElevenLabs, which may soon be valued at $3 billion\nAnnouncing the final agenda for the Fintech Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024\nAnnouncing the final agenda for the Space Stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024\nChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot\nInitialized Capital restructures, and lets multiple partners go\nThe 13 biggest take-private PE acquisitions so far this year in tech\nDOJ sentences pair for Apple repair scheme involving 6,000 knockoff iPhones\nEven the \u2018godmother of AI\u2019 has no idea what AGI is\nApple plans four new retail stores in India\nA co-lead on Sora, OpenAI\u2019s video generator, has left for Google\nInvestors are scrambling to get into ElevenLabs, which may soon be valued at $3 billion\nChatGPT: Everything you need to know about the AI-powered chatbot\nOpenAI launches new \u2018Canvas\u2019 ChatGPT interface tailored to writing and coding projects\nDOJ sentences pair for Apple repair scheme involving 6,000 knockoff iPhones\nOpenAI also secured a massive credit line\nTesla\u2019s Cybertruck racks up fifth recall in under a year\n\nThe Verge\nA new Ray-Ban Meta update adds reminders and voice messages\nThe new Ford Expedition adds Android Automotive and half of the Lincoln\u2019s panoramic screen\nPort workers on the East and Gulf coasts agree to end their strikes\nDisney Imagineer wants his amazing retractable lightsaber to become a toy\nWatch what it\u2019s like to handle an overturned truck full of burning batteries\nApple releases iOS 18.0.1 with bug fixes for iPhone 16 touchscreen and more\nSony\u2019s best ANC headphones and earbuds are getting Google\u2019s Find My Device\nThe big boys want in on crypto, too\nAnker\u2019s Soundcore Liberty 4 Pro earbuds add a charging case screen\nSenator Laphonza Butler thinks supporting Big AI or human workers is a \u2018false choice\u2019\nNow you can use Apple\u2019s Home Key to get into your garage or home office\nThe SEC is appealing a federal court\u2019s ruling on Ripple\nSamsung is turning your Galaxy phone into a smart door key\nYour smart fridge can now warn you when you\u2019ve spent too long in the shower\nGoogle\u2019s AI search summaries officially have ads\nYouTube Shorts are getting less short\nGoogle Lens now lets you search with video\nInside Elon Musk\u2019s AI party at OpenAI\u2019s old headquarters\n\nCNBC Tech\nXRP slides 9% after SEC appeals decision in landmark Ripple case\nNvidia CEO: Demand for next-generation Blackwell AI chip is 'insane'\nOpenAI gets $4 billion revolving credit line on top of $6.6 billion in funding\nRevolut slams Meta over approach to scams, says it should compensate victims\nKlarna CEO says European tech brain drain is \u2018number one risk\u2019 ahead of IPO\nOura announces new smart ring with updated design and new sensors for $349\nOpenAI closes funding at $157 billion valuation, as Nvidia signs on as investor\nFacebook owner Meta forms data-sharing pact with UK banks to counter scams", + "Top News": [ + "1. openai closes funding at $157 billion valuation, as nvidia signs on as investor", + "2. openai gets $4 billion revolving credit line on top of $6.6 billion in funding", + "3. a co-lead on sora, openai\u2019s video generator, has left for google", + "4. nvidia ceo: demand for next-generation blackwell ai chip is 'insane'", + "5. investors are scrambling to get into elevenlabs, which may soon be valued at $3 billion" + ], + "Generate_script_prompt": "\n Prompt: Give a quick tech news update script in the style of CNBC techcheck briefing as an example.\n Response: I'm Wall-E, and this is your CNBC techcheck Briefing for Monday April 29th. Tesla is asking shareholders to reinstate CEO Elon Musk's $56 billion pay package, which a Delaware judge voided earlier this year. The judge ruled that the record-setting compensation deal was, quote, deeply flawed. Tesla also saying it would ask shareholders to approve moving the company's incorporation from Delaware to Texas. The company has hired a proxy solicitor and plans to spend millions of dollars to help secure votes for the two proposals. Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company plans to look at manufacturing in Indonesia following a meeting with the country's president, Cook telling reporters following the meeting that he spoke with the president about his desire to see manufacturing there and that he believes in the country. The comments come as Apple is pushed to diversify its supply chain with more manufacturing outside of China in countries such as Vietnam and India. Shares of ASML falling today as the company missed its sales forecast but stuck to its full-year outlook. Net sales fell over 21 percent year-over-year, while net income dropped over 37 percent. ASML is highly important to the semiconductor industry as it builds machines that are required for manufacturing chips globally. Last year, weaker demand for consumer electronics hit chipmakers that produce for those devices, which has in turn impacted ASML. That's all for today. We'll see you back here tomorrow.\n Prompt: Give a quick tech news update script in the style of CNBC techcheck briefing using the following news titles and content. Closely follow how CNBC techcheck chooses context to put into the script, the langauge style and sentence structure. Use the same beginning and ending(including mentioning host Wall-E and Friday October 4), and replace CNBC techcheck briefing to 'AI briefing' \n \"title0:\nOpenAI raises at $157 billion valuation; Microsoft, Nvidia join round\ndescription0:\nOpenAI has closed its long-awaited funding round at a valuation of $157 billion, including the $6.6 billion the company raised from an extensive roster of investment firms and big tech companies.\nWhile OpenAI didn't name the investors in Wednesday's press release, a person with knowledge of the matter said the round was led by Thrive Capital and included participation from existing backer Microsoft as well as chipmaker Nvidia , SoftBank and others. Thrive planned to invest $1 billion in the round, CNBC previously reported.\nOpenAI's rapid ascent, which began with the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, has been the biggest story in the tech industry over the last couple years, bringing the concept of generative artificial intelligence into the mainstream and paving the way for tens of billions of dollars of investments in AI infrastructure.\n\"The new funding will allow us to double down on our leadership in frontier AI research, increase compute capacity, and continue building tools that help people solve hard problems,\" OpenAI wrote in a blog post Wednesday.\n\"We look forward to continuing our partnership with OpenAI,\" a Microsoft spokesperson told CNBC in a statement.\nOpenAI generated $300 million in revenue last month, up 1,700% since the beginning of last year, CNBC confirmed last week, following reporting by The New York Times. The company expects to bring in $11.6 billion in sales next year, up from $3.7 billion in 2024, according to a person close to OpenAI who asked not to be named because the financials are confidential.\nBut all that revenue is extremely costly, as OpenAI has to ramp up purchases of Nvidia's graphics processing units (GPUs) to train and run its large language models. The company expects to lose about $5 billion this year, the person said. Microsoft has invested billions of dollars in OpenAI and is a key partner as the software giant bolsters its Azure cloud business.\nEarlier this year, OpenAI was valued at a reported $80 billion, up from $29 billion in 2023. Following the viral growth of ChatGPT, momentum has continued with new products for businesses and an expansion into AI-generated photos and videos.\nOpenAI now has 250 million weekly active users on ChatGPT, CFO Sarah Friar told CNBC in a statement. There are also 11 million ChatGPT Plus subscribers and 1 million paying business users on ChatGPT, a person close to the company said.\n\"AI is already personalizing learning, accelerating healthcare breakthroughs, and driving productivity,\" Friar said in the statement. \"And this is just the start.\"\nOpenAI is experiencing plenty of growing pains along the way, including the loss of key executives, a trend that continued through last week.\nLast Wednesday, OpenAI Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati, who briefly served as interim CEO, said she would be leaving after 6\u00bd years. Shortly after that, research chief Bob McGrew and Barret Zoph, a research vice president, said they were leaving the company.\nIn an interview the next day at Italian Tech Week, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said, \"I think this will be hopefully a great transition for everyone involved and I hope OpenAI will be stronger for it, as we are for all of our transitions.\"\nAlso on Thursday, OpenAI held an all-hands meeting, following the board's decision to consider restructuring the company to a for-profit business, according to a separate person with knowledge of the matter. Altman said the departures were not related to the potential restructuring, contrary to some media reports.\nShould the change occur, the nonprofit segment would remain as a separate entity, the source said.\nAt Thursday's meeting, Altman denied reports of plans for him to receive a \"giant equity stake\" in the company, calling that information \"just not true,\" according to a person who was in attendance.\nOpenAI Chairman Bret Taylor told CNBC in a statement last week that while the board has talked about the matter, no specific figures are on the table.\n\"The board has had discussions about whether it would be beneficial to the company and our mission to have Sam be compensated with equity, but no specific figures have been discussed nor have any decisions been made,\" Taylor said.\nThe latest funding round also included participation from Khosla Ventures, Altimeter Capital, Fidelity, MGX and Tiger Global, sources told CNBC.\n\ntitle1:\nOpenAI gets $4 billion revolving credit line on top of latest funding\ndescription1:\n\"This means we now have access to over $10 billion in liquidity, which gives us the flexibility to invest in new initiatives and operate with full agility as we scale,\" OpenAI wrote in a Thursday blog post, adding that the company plans to use the money to invest in research and products, expand infrastructure, and attract talent. \"It also reaffirms our partnership with an exceptional group of financial institutions, many of whom are also OpenAI customers.\"\nThe base credit line is $4 billion, with an option to increase it by an additional $2 billion. The loan is unsecured and can be tapped over the course of three years. OpenAI's interest rate is equal to the Secured Overnight Financing Rate plus 100 basis points. SOFR, a measure of the cost of borrowing cash overnight, sat at just over 5% as of early this week, meaning OpenAI would be paying roughly 6% on money that it borrows right away.\nOpenAI has a $4 billion revolving line of credit, bringing its total liquidity to more than $10 billion, CNBC has learned. It follows news Wednesday that OpenAI closed its recent funding round at a valuation of $157 billion, including the $6.6 billion the company raised from an extensive roster of investment firms and big tech companies.\nIn this photo illustration, the OpenAI logo is displayed on a mobile phone screen with a photo of Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI.\nOpenAI's latest funding round included an extensive roster of investment firms and big tech companies. Led by Thrive Capital, which planned to invest $1 billion, investors included existing backer Microsoft as well as chipmaker Nvidia. SoftBank, Khosla Ventures, Altimeter Capital, Fidelity Management & Research Co., MGX and Tiger Global also participated, according to sources familiar with the situation.\nOpenAI's rapid ascent, which began with the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, has been the biggest story in the tech industry over the last couple of years, bringing the concept of generative artificial intelligence into the mainstream and paving the way for tens of billions of dollars of investments in AI infrastructure. Earlier this year, OpenAI was valued at a reported $80 billion, up from $29 billion in 2023.\nOpenAI generated $300 million in revenue last month, up 1,700% since the beginning of last year, CNBC confirmed last week, following reporting by The New York Times. The company expects to bring in $11.6 billion in sales next year, up from $3.7 billion in 2024, according to a person close to OpenAI who asked not to be named because the financials are confidential.\nBut all that revenue is extremely costly, as OpenAI has to ramp up purchases of Nvidia's graphics processing units to train and run its large language models. The company expects to lose about $5 billion this year, the person said. Microsoft has invested billions of dollars in OpenAI and is a key partner as the software giant bolsters its Azure cloud business.\nIn an on-air appearance Thursday, OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar said of the restructuring rumors, \"We have discussed this, that we are looking into how we restructure from here.\"\nLater, Friar added, \"We just want to be kind of a more traditional company. Why make things complicated that don't need to be complicated? We need to make sure we can continue to get investments so that we are a sustainable, long-term participant in this ecosystem, and we want to make sure it's a company that works for all of our stakeholders.\"\nOpenAI has also experienced plenty of growing pains in recent months, including the loss of key executives, a trend that continued through last week with the departures of CTO Mira Murati, research chief Bob McGrew and Barret Zoph, research vice president.\nOpenAI held an all-hands meeting last Thursday following the board's decision to consider restructuring the company to a for-profit business, according to a person with knowledge of the matter, who said that should the change occur, the nonprofit segment would remain as a separate entity.\nAt that meeting, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman denied reports of plans for him to receive a \"giant equity stake\" in the company, calling that information \"just not true,\" according to the person, who was in attendance.\nOpenAI Chairman Bret Taylor told CNBC in a statement last week that while the board has talked about the matter, no specific figures are on the table.\n\"The board has had discussions about whether it would be beneficial to the company and our mission to have Sam be compensated with equity, but no specific figures have been discussed nor have any decisions been made,\" Taylor said.\nWhen asked about whether the company will eventually go public, Friar told CNBC Thursday in the same on-air appearance that the company has \"really big aspirations of, 'How do we keep investing and what drives this technology?' It's compute first, and it's not cheap. It's great talent second, and then, of course, it's all the normal operating expenses of a more traditional company.\"\nFriar added, \"To that end, we do want to get make sure we're being creative in where we can go to tap capital. To your point, sometimes that's public markets, sometimes that's debt markets, sometimes it's project finance, structured finance. There's a lot of things that I need to get my kind of fingers into as I look forward over the next several quarters.\"\n\ntitle2:\nA co-lead on Sora, OpenAI's video generator, has left for Google\ndescription2:\nOne of the co-leads on OpenAI\u2019s video generator, Sora, has left for Google.\nTim Brooks, who was heading development on Sora with William Peebles, announced in a post on X that he\u2019ll be joining Google DeepMind, Google\u2019s AI research division, to work on video generation technologies and \u201cworld simulators.\u201d\n\u201cI had an amazing two years at OpenAI making Sora,\u201d Brooks wrote. \u201cThank you to all the passionate and kind people I worked with.\u201d\nI will be joining @GoogleDeepMind to work on video generation and world simulators! Can't wait to collaborate with such a talented team.\nI had an amazing two years at OpenAI making Sora. Thank you to all the passionate and kind people I worked with. Excited for the next chapter! \u2014 Tim Brooks (@_tim_brooks) October 3, 2024\nGoogle DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis welcomed Brooks in a reply on X, saying that he\u2019ll help to \u201cmake the long-standing dream of a world simulator a reality.\u201d World simulator is a rather vague phrase \u2014 and poorly defined \u2014 but DeepMind has applied it to models like its recently released Genie, which can generate playable, action-controllable virtual worlds from synthesized images, real photos, and even sketches.\nHere\u2019s how DeepMind researchers explained it in a 2023 paper: \u201cApplications of a real-world simulator range from controllable content creation in games and movies to training embodied agents purely in simulation that can be directly deployed in the real world.\u201d\nThrilled to welcome @_tim_brooks to @GoogleDeepMind. So excited to be working together to make the long-standing dream of a world simulator a reality!! https://t.co/dJrvXjMRBQ \u2014 Demis Hassabis (@demishassabis) October 3, 2024\nBrooks was one of the first to work on Sora, having kickstarted the project at OpenAI in January 2023. On his LinkedIn, Brooks claims to have spearheaded the project\u2019s research direction and model training.\nHis departure comes as Sora, which has yet to be released, reportedly suffers from technical setbacks that position it poorly against rival systems from Luma, Runway, and others. Per The Information, the original system, revealed in February, took more than 10 minutes of processing time to make a 1-minute video clip. OpenAI is in the process of training an improved Sora that could quickly make clips, sources tell The Information.\nGoogle has its own video generation model, Veo, that it unveiled this spring at its annual I/O developer conference, and which will soon come to YouTube Shorts, YouTube\u2019s short-form video format, to let creators generate backgrounds and six-second clips.\nAside from tech-related hurdles, OpenAI has appeared to cede vaulable partnership ground to video generation challengers in recent months. Earlier this month, Runway signed a deal with Lionsgate, the studio behind the \u201cJohn Wick\u201d franchise, to train a custom video model on Lionsgate\u2019s movie catalog. Roughly a week later, Stability, which is developing its own set of video generation models, recruited \u201cAvatar,\u201d \u201cTerminator\u201d and \u201cTitanic\u201d director James Cameron to its board.\nOpenAI was said to be meeting with filmmakers and Hollywood studios earlier this year to demo Sora \u2014 ex-CTO Mira Murati attended Cannes \u2014 and the company has teamed up with a number of independent directors and some brands to showcase the system\u2019s capabilities.\nHowever, OpenAI has yet to announce a long-term collaboration with a major production house.\nBrooks \u2014 who, in a curious turn of events, is actually returning to Google, having once worked on the company\u2019s Pixel phones \u2014 is the latest in a string of high-profile resignations from OpenAI.\nCTO Mira Murati, chief research officer Bob McGrew, and research VP Barret Zoph announced their departures in late September. Prominent research scientist Andrej Karpathy left OpenAI in February; months later, OpenAI co-founder and former chief scientist Ilya Sutskever quit, along with ex-safety leader Jan Leike. In August, co-founder John Schulman said he would leave OpenAI. And Greg Brockman, the company\u2019s president, is on sabbatical.\n\ntitle3:\nDemand for Blackwell AI chip is 'insane'\ndescription3:\nNvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in an interview with CNBC's \"Closing Bell Overtime\" that demand for the company's next-generation artificial intelligence chip Blackwell is \"insane.\"\n\"Everybody wants to have the most and everybody wants to be first,\" Huang said during the interview, which aired on Wednesday. Shares of Nvidia were up about 3% on Thursday morning.\nBlackwell, expected to cost between $30,000 and $40,000 per unit, is in hot demand from companies like OpenAI, Microsoft, Meta and other firms building AI data centers to power products like ChatGPT and Copilot.\nNvidia has been the main beneficiary of the artificial intelligence boom, with shares up about 150% year-to-date. The company's revenue continued to surge during the fiscal second quarter to $30.04 billion, up 122% on an annual basis. It expects $32.5 billion in sales during the current quarter.\n\"At a time when the technology is moving so fast, it gives us an opportunity to triple down, to really drive the innovation cycle so that we can increase capabilities, increase our throughput, decrease our costs, decrease our energy consumption,\" Huang told CNBC. \"We're on a path to do that, and everything's on track.\"\nChief Financial Officer Colette Kress said in August that the company expects to ship several billion dollars in Blackwell revenue in the company's fourth fiscal quarter.\nJensen said Nvidia plans to update its AI platform each year to increase performance by two to three times.\n\ntitle4:\nInvestors are scrambling to get into ElevenLabs, which may soon be valued at $3 billion\ndescription4:\nElevenLabs, a startup that makes AI tools for audio applications, is being approached by existing and new investors about a new round, which could value the company as highly as $3 billion, TechCrunch has learned.\nThe two-year-old company specializes in making AI tools to generate synthetic voices for audiobook narrations, and for real-time video dubbing into other languages.\nOne source at an interested VC firm told TechCrunch that investors are scrambling to get into the fast-growing company, and that their firm is willing to offer up to a $3 billion valuation, thinking that\u2019s what it might take to get into the next round. This person said a deal is likely in coming weeks.\nInvestors from two other firms confirmed that ElevenLabs is raising, but are passing on the deal. One of these sources heard secondhand that the company\u2019s annualized recurring revenue (ARR) has grown from $25 million at the end of last year to roughly $80 million in recent months, making it one of the fastest-growing startups developing actual applications for AI. (These investors asked for anonymity for competitive reasons.)\nIf accurate, that revenue figure means that investors could value ElevenLabs at around 38 times the most recent ARR figure. That multiple is slightly lower than some enterprise-focused companies such as Hebbia and Glean.\nThe lower multiple may be because a substantial portion of its revenue comes from consumer usage for narration and personal video dubbing. Consumer revenue is often considered more volatile than revenue generated from corporate clients.\nThe round, if completed at a $3 billion valuation, would triple ElevenLabs\u2019 valuation from its Series B in January, which was co-led by Andreessen Horowitz, Nat Friedman, and Daniel Gross.\nThis would be Eleven Labs\u2019 third round in a little over a year, but TechCrunch couldn\u2019t learn the size of the potential investment, as the discussions with investors are still ongoing. Eleven Labs has already raised $100 million.\nWhile Google\u2019s Gemini and OpenAI have introduced their own human voice models, neither company\u2019s offerings can clone the speech of other humans like Eleven Labs. Other companies that are targeting the synthetic voice generation market include Murf, Tavus, Resemble AI, Respeecher and Lovo.\nElevenLabs didn\u2019t respond to a request for comment.\"\n\nResponse:", + "Script": "i'm wall-e, and this is your ai briefing for friday, october 4th.\n\nopenai has made headlines by closing a new funding round at a staggering $157 billion valuation. led by thrive capital, with participation from major players like microsoft and nvidia, this move reinforces openai's dominance in generative artificial intelligence. with chatgpt's meteoric rise bringing ai mainstream, openai is doubling down on expanding its capabilities. the recent infusion will help the company boost its ai research, expand compute capacity, and continue building innovative tools. despite the influx, the company anticipates significant financial challenges due to costs associated with scaling ai infrastructure.\n\nin related news, openai secured a $4 billion revolving credit line, pushing its liquidity past $10 billion. this financial flexibility will fuel ongoing research, infrastructure expansion, and talent acquisition. amidst growth, the company faces organizational shifts, as co-leads from its video generator project, including tim brooks, depart for ventures like google deepmind.\n\nspeaking of ai infrastructure, nvidia's new blackwell chip is in red-hot demand. during an interview with cnbc, ceo jensen huang disclosed that interest in the blackwell's capabilities is \"insane,\" highlighting its pivotal role in powering advancements like chatgpt and copilot. with nvidia's revenue forecasts soaring, their innovations remain a backbone of ai expansion.\n\nfinally, investors are eyeing elevenlabs, with speculation of a valuation reaching $3 billion. known for ai-driven audio solutions, the company's quick revenue growth is attracting significant interest, showcasing the rising prominence of ai in diverse applications.\n\nthat's all for today. we'll see you back here tomorrow", + "Polished Script": "i'm wall-e, welcoming you to today's tech briefing for friday, october 4th.\n\nopenai is making waves after closing a new funding round, propelling its valuation to a massive $157 billion. led by thrive capital with strong backing from industry giants like microsoft and nvidia, this move further cements openai's leadership in generative artificial intelligence. with chatgpt gaining rapid mainstream traction, the company is accelerating efforts to enhance its capabilities. this fresh capital will support expanding ai research, boosting compute capacity, and crafting innovative tools. however, openai expects financial hurdles as it scales its ai infrastructure.\n\nin related developments, openai has secured a $4 billion revolving credit line, boosting its liquidity to over $10 billion. this added financial muscle will support ongoing research, infrastructure upgrades, and talent acquisition. yet, the company is also experiencing organizational shifts, with key figures, such as co-lead tim brooks from its video generator project, departing for ventures like google deepmind.\n\nturning to ai infrastructure, nvidia's latest blackwell chip is generating immense interest. in an interview with cnbc, ceo jensen huang described the demand for the blackwell's capabilities as \"insane,\" underscoring its central role in driving advancements like chatgpt and copilot. with nvidia's revenue forecasts on the rise, their innovations continue to be foundational to ai growth.\n\nfinally, investors have their eyes on elevenlabs, with speculation putting its valuation at $3 billion. known for ai-driven audio solutions, the company's rapid revenue growth is attracting significant attention, highlighting the increasing influence of ai across diverse applications.\n\nthat's all for today. we'll see you back here tomorrow", + "Podcast Title": "EP-122 Openai's $157b Leap \ud83d\udcb0, Nvidia's Blackwell Boom \ud83d\udd25, Elevenlabs' Audio Innovation \ud83c\udf99\ufe0f", + "Podcast Description": "
i'm wall-e, welcoming you to today's tech briefing for friday, october 4th. here's what's making headlines:
\nthat's all for today. we'll see you back here tomorrow.
", + "Image Prompt": "the podcast cover image features a futuristic landscape that seamlessly integrates elements representing the major themes. in the center, a massive three-dimensional cityscape stretches to the horizon, symbolizing openai's monumental $157 billion valuation. the skyline is adorned with shimmering skyscrapers, each window reflecting digital graphs and numbers that glisten like shimmering jewels, representing financial growth and innovation. above the city, the sky is alive with dynamic auroras in deep greens and blues, swirling with vibrant microchip patterns that denote nvidia's blackwell gpu surge. these patterns morph into an expansive neural network, arching over the cityscape like a digital sky. in the foreground, a sleek, minimalist speaker setup, symbolizing elevenlabs' audio innovation, rests on an elevated platform. sound waves, depicted as colorful, translucent ripples, radiate outward to blend seamlessly into the tech-filled environment, representing the merging of audio technology with the tech boom. the overall composition is unified, showcasing a rich tapestry of technological growth and innovation, reflecting the transformative impact of these advancements" +} \ No newline at end of file